Pursuing the Positives
New Mexico breeders Mike and Yealonda Logan constantly consider how to magnify the potential of each horse in their care
Perhaps it’s human nature that causes many people to find a method, in any particular process, that works for them and stick with that successful strategy.
But Mike and Yealonda Logan aren’t many people. For them, “status quo” is more like “status no.” Their strengths lie in continually seeking ways to develop each horse in their charge to its fullest potential—from their own to those they sale prep, foal out and rebreed for others.
That inner skill for finding new ways to achieve the best possible result in each situation contributed to their selling Stormin Cartel (Big Daddy Cartel-Icy Storm TB, Attila’s Storm), one of their consignments at last year’s New Mexico-Bred Yearling Sale, for $100,000. “Mike is about the most detail-oriented person I’ve known,” says Megan Petty DVM, who handles the foaling-season veterinary work at the Logans’ ML Racing and Farm on the Bonita River in Hondo, New Mexico. “Mike has turned what he does into an art form and is always trying to get better, and he’s willing to change whatever is needed so the horses are the best they can be.
“They take care of every horse at their place like it’s the best one they own,” Dr. Petty adds. “To them, each horse is a superstar, and their dedication means a lot to their clients. They’ve invested their lives into what they do.”
Their Beginnings in Racing
Mike, born about 40 miles west of Waco in Gatesville, Texas, spent his childhood using horses to tend the cattle, sheep and goats on his grandparents’ nearby ranch. Later on, his family moved about 300 miles west to Odessa, Texas.
Mike met Yealonda while they were teenagers at Odessa High School. After that, they each attended college but joined the workforce before finishing. Mike’s college experience included a reproductive program at Tarrant County Junior College in Fort Worth.
They married in 1975, and in 1976 they went to work for the late Bill Robertson DVM at 6R Farms in Odessa. “We worked for him for about 10 years and that’s where I really got
©Susan Bachelor, Speedhorse